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authorClemens Ladisch <clemens@ladisch.de>2009-02-17 09:50:30 +0100
committerTakashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.de>2009-02-19 10:15:39 +0100
commit6ce6c473a7fd742fdb0db95841e2c4c6b37337c5 (patch)
tree7cda3d4b0e2bfe87916767f96e78256c1350bbdb /sound/isa/dt019x.c
parent2678f60d2bc05a12580b93eb36f089f0e55693e0 (diff)
sound: virtuoso: revert "do not overwrite EEPROM on Xonar D2/D2X"
This reverts commit 7e86c0e6850504ec9516b953f316a47277825e33 ("do not overwrite EEPROM on Xonar D2/D2X") because it did not actually help with the problem. More user reports show that the overwriting of the EEPROM is not triggered by using this driver but by installing Linux, and that the installation of any other operating system (even one without any CMI8788 driver) has the same effect. In other words, the presence of this driver does not have any effect on the occurrence of the error. (So far, the available evidence seems to point to a BIOS bug.) Furthermore, it turns out that the EEPROM chip is protected against stray write commands by the command format and by requiring a separate write-enable command, so the error scenario in the previous commit (that SPI writes can be misinterpreted as an EEPROM write command) is not even theoretically possible. The mixer control that was removed as a consequence of the previous commit can only be partially emulated in userspace, which also means it cannot be seen be the in-kernel OSS API emulation, so it is better to revert that change. Signed-off-by: Clemens Ladisch <clemens@ladisch.de> Cc: <stable@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Takashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.de>
Diffstat (limited to 'sound/isa/dt019x.c')
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